Daesh exploits the fighting in Libya, to attack East Tripoli

Casualties from the battle for Libya's capital
mounted on Tuesday while Daesh killed three people in a desert town,
illustrating how terrorists may exploit renewed chaos.
Medical facilities reported 47 people killed and 181
wounded in recent days.
The fatalities were mainly fighters, although they
also comprised nine civilians including two doctors, the WHO said.
The Libyan National Army (LNA) forces of Khalifa
Haftar — a former general in ousted strongman Muammar Qadhafi's army — seized
the sparsely populated but oil-rich south earlier this year before heading
towards Tripoli this month.
They are fighting on the southern side of the city,
where witnesses said on Monday afternoon the LNA had lost control of a former
airport and withdrawn down the road.
The government of Prime Minister Fayez Al Serraj,
who has run Tripoli since 2016, is seeking to repel the LNA with the help of
armed groups from Misrata.
Serraj's forces carried out an air strike on an LNA
position in the suburb of Suq Al Khamis on Tuesday, a resident and an eastern
military source said, without giving more details.
The renewed conflict threatens to disrupt oil
supplies, boost migration across the Mediterranean to Europe and scupper UN
plans for an election to end rivalries between parallel administrations in east
and west
An UN-sponsored peace conference, scheduled to start
on Sunday in the south-western town of Ghadames, looked sure to be postponed.
"I will work with all my might to hold Libya's national conference as soon
as possible... when the conditions for success are in place," UN Envoy
Ghassan Salame said.
The United Nations, United States, European Union
and G-7 bloc have appealed for a ceasefire, a return to a UN peace plan, and a
halt to Haftar's push.
Far south of Tripoli, the Daesh group claimed
responsibility for attacking the town of Fuqaha, where residents said three
people were killed and another kidnapped.
Fuqaha is controlled by fighters loyal to Haftar,
who casts himself as a foe of Islamist extremism though he is viewed by
opponents as a new dictator in the mould of Qadhafi.
Daesh has been active in Libya in the turmoil since
the Western-backed overthrow of Qadhafii eight years ago. It took control of
the coastal city of Sirte in 2015 but lost it the following year to local
forces backed by US air strikes, and now operates in the shadows.
The attack on Fuqaha indicated Daesh may be looking
to exploit gaps left by movements of Haftar's troops.
On Monday, a warplane took out Tripoli's only
functioning airport, and the number of displaced people — 3,400 at the last UN
count — is mounting alongside the casualties.
"There are fears that the civilian death toll
will rise rapidly as the fighting intensifies and spreads into more densely
populated parts of the city," said Amnesty International's regional
deputy, Magdalena Mughrabi.
Libya has become the main conduit for African
migrants and refugees trying to reach Europe, many of whom suffer torture, rape
and extortion on their journeys.
Those who manage to board a boat to Italy risk
drowning or being sent back into detention in inhumane conditions, according to
the UN migration agency, which estimates twice as many die in the Sahara Desert
as in the Mediterranean.
UN agencies say some 5,700 refugees and migrants are
trapped in detention centres in conflict areas, and fear some may be used as
human shields or forcibly recruited.
"They tell us they can hear the clashes. Many
are really scared," UN refugee agency UNHCR spokesman Babar Baloch said.
Libyan state oil firm NOC called on the warring
parties to keep oil fields safe and allow production to continue, a company
statement said on Tuesday.
The LNA says it has 85,000 men in an army analysts
believe has been swelled by Salafist fighters and tribesmen as well as Chadians
and Sudanese from over the southern borders. Its elite Saiqa (Lightning) force
numbers some 3,500, LNA sources say.
The UN-backed Prime Minister Serraj, 59, received
calls from Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and France's President
Emmanuel Macron on Monday to discuss the crisis.
Salame is staying in Libya, a spokesman said, though
some staff at his mission went on leave and administrative personnel will work
temporarily from Tunisia.